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CCJ Trust Fund Performing Quite Well

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

A judge with the Trinidad-based Caribbean Court of Justice (CCJ) says his recent comments about the need to re-examine the trust fund that had been established to fund the court may have contributed to conveying a inaccurate perception of the state of funds available for court operations.

Last week, Justice Ralston Nelson told the Caribbean Media Corporation (CMC) that he believed that the time had come for a review of the US$100 million initiative given the changing global economic and financial environment. He stated, “I think when the sum of 100 million US dollars was arrived at, it was obvious that the data they had considered would not have included the collapse of interest rates plus the collapse of a the majority of financial institutions in 2008.”

“So … any calculations you would have made prior to setting up that fund now have to be revised anyway so that there is that aspect of it…and I think truth to tell is that the operations of the court were not fully looked at,” Justice Nelson added.

But in a brief statement issued late Saturday night, he said upon reviewing the media reports the media reports, “My comments were directed narrowly at the returns in the bond market and at noting that bonds were not producing the kinds of results projected ten years ago. ”

Furthermore, he indicated, “Fortunately, the bond market makes up only one portion of the investment portfolio of the Trust Fund which manages the US$100 million, the income of which is earmarked to fund the operations of the CCJ. The other investment options of the Fund are doing well…”

According to preliminary estimates released, the initial capital investment of US$100 million was surpassed during the course of 2013. The CCJ Trust Fund 2012 annual report had also indicated that despite a precipitous decline in global investment markets during the financial crisis of 2008, the Fund had in fact rebounded over the last few years.

Interestingly, Trust Fund records show returns on investments – net of disbursements, contributions and expenses – reached +15.9 per cent in 2009 and +10.3 per cent in 2010 before declining -1.8 per cent in 2011 and recovering to +10.1 per cent in 2012. The Fund’s long-term target annual rate of return is 8.9 per cent.

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